This week’s fresh listings:

 

This page is to be updated every Tuesday and will contain all the latest Coin, Medal & Token listings for that particular week.

 

The more observant of you may have realised that I no longer keep previous "Fresh Listings" coins on this page. 

All for sale coins can be found via the category grid on the front page.  Most sold coins are now accessible via a new link on that same category grid.

 

 

Additions to www.HistoryInCoins.com for week commencing Tuesday 17th March 2026

 

 

 

Something very different this week!!

 

 

WMH-9285:  Henry III Hammered Silver Penny - a Contemporary Continental Imitation.  Phase II, 1248-50, Provincial Phase.  Class 3c imitation: hENRI ON LVNDC - London mint.  Imitation voided long cross pennies were imported into England during, and shortly after the reign of Henry III.  They were good copies of the originals, very difficult to spot at the time, but often lightweight and not up to the .925 silver standard.  The famous 1908 Brussels' Hoard contained

many examples, suggesting the imitations were struck on the Continent, illegally passed into English circulation, hoarded for whatever reason, and then ironically sent back to the Continent.  These imitations are rarer than the Regal issues with several reference books dedicated to them, not least the excellent Sterling Imitations of Edwardian Type by Mayhew, 1983.  This one attractively toned indicating it was likely once a hoard coin.  Excellent provenance.  £135

Provenance:

ex Patrick Finn

 

WMH-9286:  Henry III Hammered Silver Penny - a Contemporary Continental Imitation.  Phase II, 1248-50, Provincial Phase.  Class 5c imitation: DJONIN ON LIHC.  Imitation voided long cross pennies were imported into England during, and shortly after the reign of Henry III.  They were good copies of the originals, very difficult to spot at the time, but often lightweight and not up to the .925 silver standard.  The famous 1908 Brussels' Hoard contained

many examples, suggesting the imitations were struck on the Continent, illegally passed into English circulation, hoarded for whatever reason, and then ironically sent back to the Continent.  These imitations are rarer than the Regal issues with several reference books dedicated to them, not least the excellent Sterling Imitations of Edwardian Type by Mayhew, 1983.  This one toned.  The ticket does say clipped but I'd suggest the coin is round and was just off-struck.  Excellent provenance.  £135

Provenance:

ex Gordon Singer

 

WMH-9287:  Edward 1st Medieval Hammered Silver Penny - a CHOICE Example.  Blunt type 1, +EDW R ANGL DNS hYB, reverse VILL ABE REV VICI - Berwick mint.  S.R.1415.  William I of Scotland invaded and attempted to capture northern England in 1173–74. After his defeat in 1174, Berwick was ceded to Henry II of England under the Treaty of Falaise.  That Treaty was annulled in 1189 and Scotland again took possession when William paid Richard I of England 10,000 marks sterling to contribute towards the latter's crusade.  In 1291–92, Berwick was the site of Edward I of England's arbitration in the contest for the Scottish crown between John Balliol and Robert Bruce, 5th Lord of Annandale.  The decision in favour of Balliol was pronounced in the Great Hall of Berwick Castle on 17 November 1292. In 1296, England went to war with France, with which Scotland was in alliance.  Balliol invaded England in response, sacking Cumberland. Edward, in turn, invaded Scotland and once again captured Berwick, destroying much of the town and massacring the burgesses, merchants and artisans of the town.  Edward 1st coinage, provincial mints included, were struck from London dies, except for the Berwick-on-Tweed coinage, all of which were from local, crude dies.  This coin, toned and very well centred, is of excellent die quality (all the more remarkable considering the crude, local nature of Berwick dies) and exceptional grade.  You'll not find better so do not miss out on this one.  £375

Provenance:

ex Tim Owen

 

WI-9288:  1601 Irish Elizabeth 1st Hammered Copper Penny.  Third issue, initial mark Star and on a generous planchets.  Most of these coins come out of the ground (it is interesting to note that examples have been unearthed from the Jamestown site in America, along with later James 1st hammered silver coinage although far from the condition of this coin) and as a result the copper corrodes.  The entire Third Issue of Irish coinage, 1601-02 only, was an emergency issue brought about by the need to pay the large numbers of soldiers who were in Ireland.  Their role was to defeat the “independent and warlike” Irish of the North, under the leadership of O’Neil, and to expeditiously “Shire” Ireland and bring it under English rule, basically making Ireland an extension of England.  The Earl of Essex was in command of the English troops but was recalled to England where he was duly executed.  His replacement, Mountjoy, somewhat motivated by the fate of his predecessor, did a much better job.  A good example.  £175

 

WG-9289:  1830 Australian "Convict Transportation" Token.  A 1797 Cartwheel penny, smoothed both sides, then hand engraved by Michael Hogan for Ellen McHenry.  Rigged ship under sail right, cannons engraved on gun ports, in script above to Ellen McHenry the Liberty 1830, rev. "When this you see, Remember me, until I gain, my Liberty, from Michael Hogan", engraved in script in five lines, 24.42g, rotation 11h.  Some minor signs of contact wear, no evidence of the original host coin on the smoothed surfaces.  A proficient hand engraving (although retaining a pleasingly naive touch), very fine and of significant historical, social and numismatic importance, as you will see when you read the research below.  These Transportation tokens are excessively rare, coming only from individuals who were sent overseas as a punishment.  They form a poignant snapshot of history at the time of departure, but probably of even greater historical and social interest is to be found in the subsequent lives these individually led together with the contributions they made, including those of their offspring, once they'd served their sentences.  Not quite the Pilgrim Fathers (!), and not wishing to get embroiled in the wrongs done to Australia's own indigenous people, but transportation convicts were an integral element in the mix in making Australia what it is today.  It is important to look at things from an individual's point of view - there were quite a few transported convicts (Michael Hogan's ship alone transported 167 convicts) but ask yourself, how many would have gone to the trouble of fashioning a convict token?  How many would have had the skill and literacy to engrave one?  How many convicts would have had a spare cartwheel penny to literally make worthless in terms of currency?  Of those who contracted skilled artists to do the engraving for them (and they do exist), how many would have had the ready means of paying those artists?  And so on, and so on.  The answer is stark - literally very few of all the convicts who were transported would have had an engraved convict token in their hands immediately prior to setting sail for Australia.  Then we look at those few convict tokens that were in the convict's hands - what became of them?  The whole point of the token was to give it to someone to remember them by: close family or lover.  The latter cohort, not wishing to sound overly heartless, would surely have gotten on with their own lives, just as Michael Hogan's girlfriend, Ellen McHenry did.  As such, those tokens would surely have been discarded; lost forever.  With regard to the close family, we all know how unlikely it is that small things last even one generational pass-over, let alone several.  Things lose their connection very quickly as we move down the generations - just look at old photographs, or even war medals.  Another point to be made is that before the 1970's and very early 1980's, these things were considered worthless.  If you were lucky they'd be in coin dealers' junk boxes but more than likely, as still happens today with worn base coinage, it would be scrapped for copper along with several other kilos of junk coinage.  Finally, we look at significant contributions made.  Most convicts did not return to the UK after their sentence was up, rather choosing to enter into Australian society and culture.  Some remained criminals, some chose a more productive path.  Very few convicts did anything significant with their lives, pretty much mirroring life everywhere.  Taking all that into consideration, we have here a rare surviving convict transportation token from an individual who founded an iconic (not to mention the most expensive to date) Australian establishment that at its last sale went for $166,000,000.  Not only that, Michael Hogan's daughter turned out to be an infamous member of the 1840's Californian Gold Rush criminal underworld.  I really don't think there can be many, if any, convict tokens to top this one in terms of historical and social context!!  £2,650

Provenance:

ex Aventine Numismatics

ex Sterling & Co, New Zealand

ex Spink

 

Research:

Michael Hogan (age 17) was convicted in Middlesex Goal and sentenced to seven years' transportation to Australia for theft. On 13 April 1830, he departed England aboard the transport ship Adrian and 166 others, arriving in New South Wales on 20 August.

 

Ellen McHenry (age 20), was similarly convicted in Middlesex on 14 January 1830 for stealing a sheet and three pairs of shoes from her landlady, Frances Head, after being asked to leave, with the stolen items found to be pawned. She was sentenced to seven years and transported separately on 27 May 1830 aboard the Mellish with 117 other women, arriving in Van Diemen's Land / Tasmania on 22 September.  She later married Isaac Swift and moved to Melbourne. Isaac had a son named John Swift, who was the father of Bertram Swift, the father of Leslie John Swift, who in turn is the father of Beverley (née Swift).

 

[Acknowledgements to Beverley Kardachi for providing additional information about her great-great-great-grandmother, Ellen McHenry]

 

By 1836, Michael Hogan was granted permission to marry fellow convict Mary Collier, a former nurse in Bathurst, New South Wales. Collier, convicted of "man robbery" in 1831 for the theft of 3 gold sovereigns, was sentenced to seven years (age 17) aboard the Pyramus with 148 others, departing on 8 October 1831 and arriving in NSW on 5 March 1832. She is described in records as a literate Protestant of fair complexion, standing 4' 9-1/4 tall.

 

Previously, in 1835, she was granted an application of marriage to another convict, William West, but that did not go ahead for reasons unknown.  Hogan and Collier became publicans in Sydney, establishing the Talbot Inn in 1848, which became the Crossroads Hotel, standing to this day as one of Sydney's oldest pubs. In April 2022, Crossroads became Australia's most expensively traded pub, selling for $160 million AUD.

 

Their daughter, Mary Anne Hogan, became a notorious figure in San Francisco's criminal underworld with the onset of the California Gold Rush. She was a known member of the Sydney Ducks, a gang composed of Australian ex-convicts, and the lover of two infamous criminals, James "Long Jim" Stuart and Samuel Whittaker. After a fire destroyed her pub, suspected to be a Ducks hideout in Sansome St, she relocated to Green and Dupont Streets, where Whittaker moved in with her, paying $20 weekly for board. While she denied receiving any gifts or stolen goods from him, she admitted to handling 21 ounces of gold and $300 on his behalf, which was later returned.